Heading a soccer ball can cause long-term damage to areas of the brain associated with learning, new research shows.
Prescribed to treat hypothyroidism and thyroid cancer, around 7% of the U.S. population takes levothyroxine. The drug is a ...
While many people believe e-cigarettes to be less harmful than cigarette smoking, new research from the University of ...
Levothyroxine, commercially known as Synthroid among other names, is commonly used to treat an underactive thyroid.
Bouncing a soccer ball off the head during play could be doing real damage to the brain, a new study suggests.
The "brain fog" of long COVID might be due to impaired lung function following a person's infection, a new study says.
Researchers from the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) analyzed the brain MRIs of 352 amateur soccer players, aged ...
Karena Galvin, Deputy Executive Director of The Radiological Society of North America, joins Jon Hansen on Your Money Matters ...
Soccer heading may cause more damage to the brain than previously thought, according to a study presented at the annual ...
A new study of high school football players found that concussions affect an often-overlooked but important brain signal. The ...
Soccer players who headed the ball at high levels showed abnormality of the brain's white matter adjacent to sulci, which are deep grooves in the brain's surface. Abnormalities in this region of the ...